What Is Vacuum Casting?

Vacuum-Casting

Vacuum casting is an advanced low-volume manufacturing technique combining silicone mold flexibility with vacuum-assisted resin infusion. Unlike injection molding, it’s ideal for producing 10–50 identical parts with production-grade material properties (e.g., ABS-like, transparent, or rubber-like polyurethanes).

Key Characteristics:

  • Resolution: Captures details down to 0.05mm (comparable to injection molding).
  • Materials: 500+ Shore hardness options (from soft elastomers to rigid plastics).
  • Industry Standards: Complies with ISO 9001 for controlled environments.

How Does Vacuum Casting Work? (Step-by-Step)

1. Master Model Preparation

  • Input: 3D-printed (SLA/DLP) or CNC-machined master, often post-processed with sanding/polishing.
  • Critical Detail: Surface finish directly transfers to final parts – any defects will replicate.

2. Silicone Mold Fabrication

  • Process: Liquid silicone (e.g., Dragon Skin®) is poured over the master in a pressure pot (1–2 bar) to prevent microbubbles.
  • Curing: 4–8 hours at 40°C for optimal tear resistance.
  • Mold Design: Requires venting channels and sprue gates for resin flow.

3. Vacuum Casting Cycle

  1. Degassing: Resin mixed with catalyst is vacuumed (-0.95 bar) for 3–5 minutes to eliminate air.
  2. Pouring: Resin injected into mold under vacuum to prevent void formation.
  3. Curing: 60–80°C oven for 1–4 hours (depends on resin system).

4. Post-Processing

  • Demolding: Silicone molds allow undercuts but require careful cutting.
  • Finishing: Parts may need UV coatingdyeing, or assembly (for multi-material casts).

Advantages and Disadvantages of Vacuum Casting

✅ Advantages

  1. Economic Efficiency
    • Tooling cost: $200–$500/mold vs. $5k+ for injection molds.
    • Break-even point: ~50 parts (vs. 1,000+ for injection molding).
  2. Material Performance
    • Tensile strength: Up to 60 MPa (comparable to ABS).
    • Thermal resistance: Some resins withstand 100–120°C (e.g., RenCast® 640).
  3. Design Flexibility
    • Overmolding: Embed inserts (metals, electronics) in a single step.
    • Transparency: Optical-grade resins like ClearFlex® for lenses.

❌ Disadvantages

  1. Mold Limitations
    • Max 50 cycles before silicone loses dimensional stability.
    • Not suitable for glass-filled or high-impact materials.
  2. Geometric Constraints
    • Wall thickness: 1–5mm (thicker sections risk sink marks).
    • Undercuts require mold segmentation, increasing cost.
  3. Labor Intensity
    • Manual processes (e.g., degassing, demolding) limit scalability.

Applications by Industry

🚗 Automotive

  • Functional prototypes: HVAC components, dashboards (tested for vibration/heat).
  • Pre-production: Mirror housings in ABS-like resin (validated for fitment).

🏥 Medical

  • Biocompatible devices: Hearing aid shells (ISO 10993-certified resins).
  • Ergonomic testing: Handheld surgical tools with soft-grip overmolding.

🎮 Consumer Electronics

  • Cosmetic prototypes: Smartphone cases in matte/flexible finishes.
  • Waterproof testing: Wearable device housings (simulating IP67 seals).

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